Property Value

Examples

The following code example sets the BackColor and ForeColor of the controls to the default system colors. The code recursively calls itself if the control has any child controls. This code example requires that you have a Form with at least one child control; however, a child container control, like a Panel or GroupBox, with its own child control(s) would better demonstrate the recursion.

' Reset all the controls to the user's default Control color.
Private Sub ResetAllControlsBackColor(control As Control)
control.BackColor = SystemColors.Control
control.ForeColor = SystemColors.ControlText
If control.HasChildren Then
' Recursively call this method for each child control.
Dim childControl As Control
For Each childControl In control.Controls
ResetAllControlsBackColor(childControl)
Next childControl
End If
End Sub

Remarks

The ForeColor property is an ambient property. An ambient property is a control property that, if not set, is retrieved from the parent control. For example, a Button will have the same BackColor as its parent Form by default. For more information about ambient properties, see the AmbientProperties class or the Control class overview.

Notes to Inheritors

When overriding the ForeColor property in a derived class, use the base class's ForeColor property to extend the base implementation. Otherwise, you must provide all the implementation. You are not required to override both the get and set accessors of the ForeColor property; you can override only one if needed.